Sorry, I don't have too much experience at diskess linux booting...Can the screen be scrolled back up to see more info?I have a intel motherboard with intel 10/100/1000 network card in this box. Sarge hardware detect error?

Yes. If the kernel can't configure your card then it won't be able to mount NFS root file system.

You should be able to use Shift + Page Up/Down to scroll the screen.

Can you please start that machine with the KickStart CD and see what driver is loading ? Or if not then send us the output of the lspci -vv command. You might need to actually install the CD on that machine (i don't know if this is feasible in your conditions).

It looks like the driver for you card wasn't in the initrd image that the core is providing to the media directors. This is fixed as of now but unfortunately the next build 2.0.0.12 is currently being built and we can't put this into that right now. The good news is that we plan a very short 2.0.0.12 and release the next one a couple of days later (maybe one week). This should not let you wait more than one week.

(Delete MD device and recreate it? This ties back to my other question of getting Admin page created MD's to generate the bootimage files.)

The easy way out is to delete the image and recreate it. Since you didn't install anything in that image yet, I recommend you take this approach.

The other way would be chrooting into the disk image and uninstalling the kernel package. This would trigger a kernel reinstall next time images are checked.

Images are created and kernels installed at boot time by the Diskless_Setup.sh and Create_DisklessMD_FS.sh scripts found in /usr/pluto/bin. The first calls the second for each MD.

Just in case you wonder why I don't automate this: when you install the kernel, it creates an initrd on its own. Now, I could just create that each time, but it wouldn't be efficient for most of the users. The initrd includes some predefined modules, but not all, so I have to add modules to a config file used by mkinitrd in the kernel-image postinstall script.

I could check the initrd file when doing a kernel install though, so if we change the kernel version the initrd config file gets updated before the new kernel install.